4.5 Review

Deep learning in macroscopic diffuse optical imaging

Journal

JOURNAL OF BIOMEDICAL OPTICS
Volume 27, Issue 2, Pages -

Publisher

SPIE-SOC PHOTO-OPTICAL INSTRUMENTATION ENGINEERS
DOI: 10.1117/1.JBO.27.2.020901

Keywords

macroscopic diffuse optics; deep learning; diffuse optical tomography; review; diffuse optics; fluorescence molecular tomography; lifetime imaging; tissue hemodynamics

Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health [R01CA207725, R01CA237267, R01CA250636]

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This article provides a comprehensive review of the use of deep learning (DL) in macroscopic diffuse optical imaging (DOI). It introduces DL in layman terms and summarizes the current DL work in some active areas of DOI, including optical properties retrieval, fluorescence lifetime imaging, and diffuse optical tomography. The results show numerous advantages of using DL for DOI compared to conventional inverse solvers, such as a decrease in analysis time, increased reconstruction quality, robustness to noise, and the capability to learn complex end-to-end relationships. The heavily validated capability of DL has enormous potential to bring novel DOI modalities to the patient's bedside.
Significance: Biomedical optics system design, image formation, and image analysis have primarily been guided by classical physical modeling and signal processing methodologies. Recently, however, deep learning (DL) has become a major paradigm in computational modeling and has demonstrated utility in numerous scientific domains and various forms of data analysis. Aim: We aim to comprehensively review the use of DL applied to macroscopic diffuse optical imaging (DOI). Approach: First, we provide a layman introduction to DL. Then, the review summarizes current DL work in some of the most active areas of this field, including optical properties retrieval, fluorescence lifetime imaging, and diffuse optical tomography. Results: The advantages of using DL for DOI versus conventional inverse solvers cited in the literature reviewed herein are numerous. These include, among others, a decrease in analysis time (often by many orders of magnitude), increased quantitative reconstruction quality, robustness to noise, and the unique capability to learn complex end-to-end relationships. Conclusions: The heavily validated capability of DL's use across a wide range of complex inverse solving methodologies has enormous potential to bring novel DOI modalities, otherwise deemed impractical for clinical translation, to the patient's bedside. (C) The Authors. Published by SPIE under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.

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